All About Red-Bellied Woodpeckers

Meet the woodpecker with a puzzling moniker and a big appetite for suet.

By Ken Keffer

Jeffrey Crawn

Trees are key to luring red-bellieds to your yard. Alive or dead, trees provide plenty of places to forage or nest. Berry-producers like hawthorn and mountain ash are some favored food sources.

Named for the hard-to-see, faint crimson color on their undersides, red-bellied woodpeckers are widespread in the eastern half of the United States. They’re more common in the southern states, but the species is on the move and the breeding range has extended north over the last century.

With zebra-like stripes on their backs and wings, red-bellieds have a few look-alike relatives, such as the gila and golden-fronted woodpeckers of the Southwest. It’s thanks to one distinguishable characteristic—a red head—that these woodpeckers are frequently confused with the less common red-headed woodpecker species, which shows a full head of bold red feathers.

And then there’s the ambiguous red belly that makes many bird-watchers wonder if the person who named this woodpecker was seeing things. It’s only when the light hits the stomach just right that the blush-colored feathers are most noticeable, and you finally see how this flier got its name.

Typical woodpecker features shared by red-bellieds include stiff tails to prop their bodies up against tree trunks, and feet with two toes facing forward and two pointing backward. That foot structure helps them grasp branches and bark as they navigate up and around tree trunks, on the hunt for insects.

photo credit: Carolyn Stuart In autumn, red-bellied woodpeckers store seeds and nuts in cracks in tree bark. They go back to their hiding spots for an easy-to-find meal come winter.

Like many species in the woodpecker family, male and female red-bellieds look slightly different. Males sport full red foreheads, caps and napes, while females have red napes and just a touch of ruby at the base of their bills. Their offspring, however, have plain, nondescript heads with a subdued red hue.

Both parents put in the work to incubate 4 to 6 eggs per clutch, with males often taking the night shift. It’s not uncommon for the pair to aggressively defend their nest against potential predators, including starlings, snakes or even other woodpeckers.

To lure these lively and desirable woodpeckers to your backyard feeding station, serve a variety of their favorite foods. Suet is a must, especially in winter. Sunflower seeds and peanuts are a hit, too. And then sweeten the deal with sugar water, fruit and jelly. As red-bellieds swoop in to your feeders for a snack, listen for the exuberant, guttural quirr quirr quirr chatter. Unlike most bird species, both males and females vocalize throughout the year. The sound is a favorite of many backyard birders. (Read more!The 4 Best Foods for Woodpeckers)

“The bird’s distinctive call announces its presence at our feeders,” says Birds & Blooms reader Stephen Holland of Sandown, New Hampshire. “The unique coloring of a red head and striped back makes it stand out in all seasons.”

I am always in awe of this beautiful bird when it visits the suet feeder in my yard. It’s vivid colors are amazing and it’s always a treat to watch this wonderful species. It is always quite respectful of other birds and waits it’s turn at the suet feeder…unlike the Starlings that come to my feeder and bully anyone else who was there first!

I have a red bellied that keeps banging into my picture window. It goes on all day long and it’s annoying.He wakes me up in the morning and when he hits the window he poops. I have a messy window!
I’ve tried putting things against the window and tape plastic bags out side on the window but so far nothing keeps him away. he was here before and came back this year.
Does anyone have a suggestion?

How do you get rid of them… I have several here who come and they are destroying my house leaving holes everywhere. We have patched them up several times, but they keep coming back. I don’t feed the other birds so as not to attract them back but we have woods in the back and they seem to stay there and then migrate over to our yard.